Sunday, August 16, 2009

Powerscourt Demesne thrives on its renaissance

2009 08 16_0273 I SPENT this Sunday morning pottering around Powerscourt Demesne at Enniskerry Co Wicklow with my camera. The was once the ‘Big House’ of the Viscounts’ Powerscourt, whose family name was Wingfield.

Ten individuals have borne the title Viscount Powerscourt, the current holder being Mervyn Niall Wingfield, born in 1935. Their family estate at one time consisted of 49,000 acres of land, 36,700 acres of it in County Wicklow. The rental income from this land provided the wherewithal to construct and develop the Demesne and its surrounded by 850 acres.

Today, the Demesene is home to the Ritz Carlton Hotel, Powerscourt Golf Club and a thriving restaurant, garden centre and retail outlet operated by Avoca Handweavers.

Richard Castle, classical architect

Powerscourt House was designed by Richard Castle and was built between 1731 and 1740. Castle (1690 – 1751) was of German origin and moved to Ireland around 1728. He also designed:

  • Russborough House (1742-1755), built for Joseph Leeson, Earl of Milltown, a wealthy brewer before the advent of Guinness and after whom Leeson Street is named.
  • Carton House (1739-1745), set in 1,000 acres and built for Robert FitzGerald, the 19th Earl of Kildare (1675-1744) who also commissioned Castle to design Frascati House at Blackrock, Co Dublin.
  • Leinster House (1745-1751), built for James FitzGerald, the 20th Earl of Kildare and 1st Duke of Leinster; now home of the Oireachtas.
  • Tyrone House, Marlborough St Dublin (1740-1745), now headquarters of the Department of Education and Science.
  • Rotunda Hospital (1757) at a cost then of £20,000. Having been built under Royal Charter it became a national institution and the first ever maternity hospital to inaugurate the Mastership system, whereby a Master was appoint in overall charge for a fixed, non-renewable term of 7 years.
  • Dining Hall and Printing House, Trinity College
  • Powerscourt Town House, South William St Dublin, now a retail centre.

The early 1700’s were an era of great confidence in Ireland. The parliament building at College Green was opened in 1739 and remained the country’s parliament until the Act of Union in 1800. The construction of Big Houses continued until the middle of the 19th century.

Gardens at Powersourt

2009 08 16_0274_edited-1 The Demesne is located in a unique setting with the Sugarloaf Mountain overlooking it from not too far away. The Italian-style garden next to Powerscourt House was designed in 1842 and took 20 years to develop from 1860 to 1880. The 7th Viscount Powerscourt was the prime mover. He was only seven years old when his father, the 6th Viscount died in 1844 at the age of 30. The 7th Viscount travelled extensively, when he was old enough to do so, to gather inspiration for his garden. His travels took him to Versailles, Schönnbrunn Palace in Vienna, the royal residence of the Hapsburg monarchs and the gardens at Schwetzingen Castle which were laid out in the second half of the 18th century. The two winged figures in my photograph are of Fame and Victory. They were made in Berlin in 1866. This garden is considered to be the last specimen of an aristocratic garden in Europe and it was developed at a time when landscape architects had possibly more influence than artists or architects. The unique characteristics of it are the triton fountain which spews water 100 feet high, the wrought iron gates, pebbled paving, the classical statues and the careful location of trees.

The post-Famine period in Ireland from 1850 to 1870 was the era of the grandmother of the late lamented (or should I day demented?) Celtic Tiger. Post-Famine rents were higher by 20-30% and paid on time. Arrears that occurred during the Famine were paid off. Property values increased and land became a very acceptable collateral for loans. The Disestablishment Act of 1869 resulted in the Church of Ireland receiving compensation of £8.5 million and it lent £3.5 million of this to 120 Irish landlords. The Catholic Church got in this too when Maynooth College received £369,000 and lent £315,000 of this to seven landlords.

Farming was profitable at the time and large landlords embraced new farming practices. The lifestyle of the Powerscourts’ in the mid 19th century was therefore one of indulgence, exclusivity and abundance .

St Patrick’s Church

2009 08 16_0277 The Protestant population of Enniskerry attended church in the grounds of the Demesne until 1859 when the Powerscourt family decided to build St Patrick’s outside the Demesne because of the loss of privacy.  The tethering of horse on the tress of the Demesne and the parking of carriages in the yard of the House became an irritant!

Walking through the church graveyard this morning was like taking a tour through recent Irish economic history as I notices the graves of individuals such as Sir Basil Goulding and George Crampton.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Sinn Fein mystery tour to Lisbon departs

eu flag WHY IS it that it that foreign political entities so passionately seek to protect our Irish nation state from the thrall of Europe and the consequences of The Lisbon Treaty? Perhaps because they anticipate that there is a slight chance that the electorate will abandon their own singular sense of long term self-interest and climb aboard a rickety mystery train where the landmarks are ‘good or bad’, ‘black or white’, ‘pretty or ugly’; where prosperity is a UFO and chronic poverty and deprivation are the tribal badges of a what binds them in their eternal, infinite misery.

Last year we endured the histrionics of the Libertas enterprise that was going to wash over us with the cleansing characteristics of a surging Atlantic foam.  Libertas, naturally, sought legitimacy after the No argument prevailed in the first referendum. Their subsequent ambitions were  far-reaching.  They were not just going to conquer Ireland, but all of Europe from a fortress in Tuam, with a new political disposition in the European Parliament. But the Irish electorate as not as green as they are cabbage-looking and by the time local and European Parliament elections took place on 5 June, the time had come for Libertas to grab their Louis Vuitton luggage, board the Titanic, pay their enormous outstanding bills and disappear over the horizon.

Today, Sinn Féin launched its No campaign to save us from what they consider to be the toxic potential of the second Lisbon Treaty referendum on 2 October. They argue that it is ‘an out of date document that is bad for the Irish and European economy’. Don’t you always admire one-dimensional thinking and the old world of ‘black and white’, ‘good and bad’, win or lose’, ‘ma and pa’, ‘Fred and Wilma’, Barney and Beanie’. Imagine – the out of date document is ‘bad’.

How could a recession be used as scare tactic?  Perhaps through some, yet to be identified, by-product of voodoo concocted by a bearded bogyman.  Have you ever associated the leadership of that party with modernity? I reckon the ambition of the Irish electorate in on the prospects of recovery not the type of fossilising isolation endured by citizens of Albania, Myanmar and Zimbabwe

They are concerned by what they see as the ‘singular focus’ of the European Commission on competitiveness. Competitiveness, as a foundation to prosperity is ‘bad’. So what is ‘good’? Apparently a capacity to strategically intervene in the economy is ‘good’, but there is no elaboration of what intervention they have in mind? I guess this is another blind date; an instance of beauty really being in the eye of the beholder and the beholder being afflicted with advanced, untreated glaucoma.

What economic angel dust has Sinn Féin ever sprinkled to even tease the electorate that it is economically literate, that they understand the ambition of electorate or that they are remotely progressive or have the naked coherence to deliver anything of value to the electorate? Their advocacy of wealth creation is rather circumscribed so don’t expect any diversions down highways, byways or back lanes that could result in new jobs, new patents from research, increased international trade, a more vibrant tourist sector, a more sophisticated society, a €15 billion healthcare system that is not dysfunctional, enhanced confidence or a viable vision that is achievable. Perhaps they have become too suffocated with the economic doctrine of Robert Mugabe and his weakness for state intervention.

Their native Northern Ireland has an economy has a chronic dependence on state handouts and state employment but I have never detected a craving that this approach would be admired and desired in our own nation state.  The 30% decline in support for Sinn Féin in Dublin last June would imply that the electorate wishes to idolise some other lateral thinking political demigods for whom insular tribal clamminess is not a prerequisite rather than live in a cave waiting for the rain to stop.  It is simply not adequate to build a campaign on vacuous slogans. An electorate will examine what a political party is capable of achieving and what its accomplishment are.  The posturing of a ‘party of protest’ achieves nothing.  Society needs ‘do-ers’, not wafflers!

The UK Independence Party are also compassionately concerned about our wellbeing and the threat of a totalitarian super-state evolving “by deception, propaganda and outright lies”.  Indeed!  The search for virtue is endless!

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Glaslough – County Monaghan’s Hidden Gem!

2009 08 12_0114 I ’VE been enjoying the second of two weeks away from the day job in reasonably mild and agreeable Irish weather.  Yesterday I escaped from the Ross O’Carroll Kelly caricatures that populate The Pale and spent the day in County Monaghan.  I believed that there were no exquisite hospitality venues in Ireland that I had never experienced but I had never been to Castle Leslie in Glaslough Co. Monaghan. It was built around 1870 when the population of Co Monaghan was 115,000 persons.  Its population today is shy of 56,000.

The Castle, set in 1,000 acres overlooking Glaslough (Green Lake),  was the venue for the wedding reception of Paul McCartney to the demure and effervescent Heather Mills in June 2002.  Their subsequent parting was so ugly, bitter and coarse that I had actually thought their nuptials had taken place much earlier than that.

2009 08 12_0104 I had arranged to meet my cousin Peggy and her husband Maurice for lunch and the venue selected was The Hunting Lodge at the Castle.  To say that I was pleasantly surprised would be a gross understatement and I am not a person that is easy to please.  This is one of Ireland’s top class hospitality venues that manages to coalesce elegance, modern standard, tasty rations and traditional elegance.  Every facet of the place impressed me enormously. 

This is certainly not an emulator of certain Dublin 2 hotel which flies a national flag that is so filthy as to almost convince one that it is used after dark for animal bedding during the breeding season.  Of course, if the flag outside the door of a hotel is so grossly  disrespected -  what is that likely to say about all the other standards at such a hotel?  Could a guest really expect the bed linen to be cleaner than the national flag?

The Irish Hotels Federation have stated that the hotel industry in Ireland is overwhelmed by overcapacity and that an average of 47% of all rooms are vacant every single night.  But the Castle Leslie complex is in a league of its own.  It is clearly under the direction of an owner who is inspired as well as being visionary.  To put it simply, it is ‘the real McCoy’!

Castle Leslie would have been known as one of Ireland’s Big Houses.  These Houses were typically set at the end of an avenue and usually had extensive stables, a very large farm and gardens which imbued them with the self-containment of a remote island.  The era of the Big House was effectively over by the 1870’s at which stage there were, perhaps up tot 2,000 of them in Ireland.

Sir John Leslie built Glaslough at that time to mark his elevation to the baronetcy. He continued to live there until 1906 when he and his wife retired to London.  The papers of Sir Shane Leslie, the 3rd Baronet, state that country life was entirely organised to give nobility, gentry and aspiring-gentry a good time! The Leslie family were one of the largest land-owning families in Ireland in the 19th century.  They owned almost 50,000 acres in seven counties – Donegal, Down, Fermanagh, Meath, Monaghan and Tyrone.  Their largest estate was in Co. Donegal and consisted of 28,827 acres that included St Patrick’s Purgatory in Lough Derg, which remains a Catholic pilgrimage venue.

The Leslie’s were related through marriage to some of Ireland’s most prominent families, including the Marquis of Waterford, the Earl of Portarlington.  Sir John II married Leonie Jerome, the daughter of a wealthy American newspaper owner.  Through this marriage, the Leslies became related to the Dukes of Marlborough.  Leonie’s sister, Lady Jennie Churchill, was wife of Sir Randolph and mother of Sir Winston Churchill

2009 08 12_0111 I had a brief chat after lunch yesterday with Sir John Leslie, 4th Baronet, also known as Jack (the guy with the feather in his hat).  Now, 92 years old, he reminded me of his interest in night-clubbing!  He is a first cousin, once removed, of the former British Prime Minister, Churchill and celebrated his 85th birthday at a nightclub in Ibiza.  He lived in Italy for a number of years and spent five years as a POW in the last World War. 

His father, Sir Shane Leslie the 3rd Baronet, became a Catholic and had a diplomatic career as an aide the the British Ambassador to the US during World War I.

If Glaslough is County Monaghan’s hidden gem, Castle Leslie is its hidden diamond with the clarity, carat, colour and cut that gives it an enduring brilliance and special sparkle!

Monaghan formed part of the ancient territory of Oriel and was dominated by the Macmahon Clan before the British took it over in 1589.

The other landed estates in County Monaghan included Dartrey Castle, the home of the Dawson family. Thomas Dawson, a Whig MP for Monaghan was made Viscount Cremorne in 1775. The Castle was demolished in 1950.

The Rossmore Estate in 1790 comprised 11,960 acres all centred on the town of Monaghan. This estate belonged to the Blayney family after whom the town of Castleblayney is named. Rossmore Castle was constructed in 1827 by the 3rd Lord Rossmore. The castle was vacated by the 6th Lord Rossmore and his family after World War II due to dry rot and decay. The family moved to Camla Vale within the estate grounds and purchased this property from the Westenra family. The castle was demolished in 1974.  An older estate is County Monaghan is that of Hilton Park in Clones.  Now, in the hospitality business under the management of the 9th generation of the Madden family, Hilton Park was built in 1734 – around the same time as the Powerscourt Demesne in Enniskerry, for the Madden family.  It originally had 8,193 acres attached to it.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The peril of NAMA and the blind faith of the taxpayer

Scope and role of NAMA

gov buildingsIRELAND’s National Assets Management Agency (NAMA) is being set up to buy the most dodgy loans to property developers’ on the balance sheets of Irish banks. The existence of these loans is said to be preventing the banks from lending to the authentic, productive segment of the economy and enabling that segment to stimulate economic recovery.  They lent too much to too few property developers and speculators but it acted as steroids would for bankers’ bonus enhancement.  Many a good Sunday afternoon in the corporate boxes at Croke Park, Punchestown and the Curragh was enjoyed on the strength of it!

These loans are to be valued on the basis of a prescribed methodology, as defined in the Bill. Their valuation will be lower than that recorded in the balance sheet of the lending bank. Valuation is not to be determined by the inflated assumptions and price structure on which they loans were first approved. The assets which were provided as security for the loans will be valued on the basis of a price is realistically achievable in the medium to longer term in term. NAMA will be the largest property owner in the country and will have the bargaining power that goes with this status. This means that it should be able to choose when to put property on the market without depressing market prices unduly.

It is intended that the elimination of uncertainty and the cleaning up of bank balance sheets to more truly reflect the genuine underlying values of their assets and liabilities will revive our financial system and provide credit to businesses that need it and the interests of depositors will also be more secure. 

The recent court case involving ACC Bank could put a spanner in works of NAMA if emulated.  Not all banks will entertain the NAMA agenda as evidenced by the approach of its parent since 2002, the Dutch AAA rated Rabobank,

 

Can Irish banks be trusted?

All of the foregoing is predicated on the Government having no role in the commercial conduct of Irish banks.

The Government has rejected, at least for now, the option of nationalisation, arguing that it is better that the banks’ maintain a presence on the stock market and conduct themselves within the constraints and disciplines of that marketplace. But is this great act of faith not a bridge too far for the Irish banks? It sends a shiver through my spine that almost frightens the living daylights out of me to see these morons’ self-policing.  Some of them are not fit to be the janitors removing cigarette butts from the latrines in the staff toilets, even with the protection of plastic gloves and goggles!

Were these banks not supposedly operating within the constraints and disciplines of the investment market for decades only to end up as the basket cases that they now are? The same disciplines that allowed them foster a nationwide culture of tax evasion (including personal tax evasion by themselves), offshore accounts for indigenous residents, scam charges on customer accounts and the cute-whore approach did not seem to conflict with their notion of discipline.

When one peruses the annual and interim reports of these awful banks it is abundantly clear that their all-consuming love affair with the property sector was intense, passionate, titivating and, of premier importance,  bonus yielding. But have these dysfunctional gobshites any understanding of the needs and dynamics of authentic economy?

I frankly fear they do not and are incapable of learning and the more I see of their Windsor Tie Knots, their grimaces of injured innocence and the ugly oversized cuff-links perched on their starched white shirts, the less convinced I become.

As the nation awaits the debate of the NAMA Bill in the Oireachtas next month many of us are utterly mesmerised by the complexity and scale of the proposed NAMA project and the level of risk that it involves is beyond the comprehension of the average person. The value of the assets concerned, around €90 billion, is equivalent to the total personal expenditure of all the citizens of the State in an entire year in good times. It is three times the amount of tax the Revenue Commissioners will collect in 2009 and it is over 50% of the likely GDP in 2009. 

 

Impact of lower credit ratings’

Many are being hurt by mortgage interest rate and cost increases.  But the Government see these as reflecting commercial marker realities.  They are careful not to spell out what these realities are.  But could they have anything to do with degraded ratings and subversive transactions for which no one has been held accountable in a court of law?

The investigation by the Chartered Accountants Regulatory Board was being overseen until recently by the board Chairman who is also a director a bank being investigated.  Can you imagine the bean-counters even allowing such a juxtaposition to materialise for the sake of their own credibility in society?

Apart from being clueless about the authentic economy our friends with the golden cuff links had no difficulty ramping up credit until it surpassed 200% of gross domestic product as though it were competing with Iceland in the financial services Olympics.  The could do this because the vey same Government “had no role in the day-today commercial operation of the Irish Banks” – so they could do what they liked and to hell with the consequences, as long as it did not impair their personal remuneration.

NAMA does not have a mandate now to deal with dodgy residential loans.  The individual mortgage bearer is not as  ‘systemically important’ enough to matter as Anglo Irish Bank, a bank where no fewer than five chartered accountant ran they show.

 

The Alan Greenspan influence on Irish banking

Capitalism in the United States and elsewhere was energised by an approach proselytised by Alan Greenspan the Former Chairman of the US Federal Reserve Board (the Fed) to the effect that the enlightened self-interest of owners and managers of financial institutions would lead them to maintain a sufficient buffer against insolvency by actively monitoring and managing their firms’ capital and risk positions. It was against this background that a plethora of so-called financial instruments, derivatives, sub-prime mortgages and securitised assets.

Greenspan was a passionate advocate of the free market. He was appointed to the chairmanship of the Fed by Ronald Reagan in August 1987 and held this position throughout the presidencies of George H Bush, Bill Clinton and George H W Bush until he was replaced by Ben Bernanke in 2006. The 1987 stock market crash coincidentally occurred the following October. Greenspan used the tools of monetary policy to guide the US economy.

This means controlling the availability and cost of money – so varying the interest rate was a central feature of the Fed’s tool kit throughout his tenure to particularly control the threat of inflation and maintain the value of the US $ at a satisfactory level on foreign exchange markets. The Republican Party, starting with Reagan, was a very strong advocate of reducing government influence and this meant that the Fed avoided the toolkit of fiscal stimulus – government borrowing, spending and taxation, to guide the economy. Their approach was to allow the market determine virtually everything.

The crucial difference between these newer financial products and traditional financial assets, such as stocks and shares, is that cash is directly exchanged for an asset concurrently in the case of a share purchase. Credit problems do not fester like rats in a sewer.  The incidence of risk is minimised so the calculus of a bookmaker are not as necessary. Auditors can audit share transactions.

Derivatives and similar financial products are based on underlying contracts that can remain unsettled for very long periods. Some of the more complex derivatives can involve thousands of contracts and hundreds of contracting parties. Values are determined by an independent index – such as FX rates, interest rates, share prices etc.  If there is an adverse movement in a relevant index of indices there may, or may not be a guarantee in place to trigger a payment.If there is no guarantee, or collateral underpinning a derivative their value is a function of the credit worthiness of the various connected parties but the apparent profits are recorded as earnings before money changes hands. 

What happens in practice is that banks involved with derivatives and similar assets accumulate large quantities of ‘paper assets’, liabilities and counterclaims – an opaque cobweb of mutual dependence and dependence on third parties that are often unidentifiable. This minefield has yet to raise its head in the context of the assets and liabilities of Irish banks and building societies.

This meant that investors are not in a position to understand and analyse banks and financial institutions because these instruments can be underpinned by thousands of contracts and hundreds of counterparties. Their value and the value of their underlying financial assets can therefore be over or understated by a crippling variation, as was demonstrated by the collapse of Bear Sterns.

 

Limitations of transparency

Transparency is a much bandied word especially when it comes to averting future problems. Bu there is no reporting mechanism that can either define the risk of measure the value of a complex set of derivatives. They are not audited and they are not regulated.

I will be interested to observe the level of transparency that applied to NAMA.  The nationalised Anglo Irish Bank has billions of € in impaired loans, including loans to directors and managers,  but it is not possible to ascertain if these include the loans approved for the purchase of the Irish Glass Bottle site at Ringsend, Dublin to which the State’s Dublin Dockland Authority is a joint venture partner, notwithstanding that the current Government appointed Executive Chairman of Anglo Irish Bank was also the Government appointed Chairman of Dublin Docklands Development Authority in succession to Lar Bradshaw, formerly a director of Anglo Irish Bank. The current Chairman of Dublin Docklands Development Authority, Niamh Brennan, is an accomplished UCD professor and the leading academic advocate in Ireland of transparent, credible corporate governance!  Will our patience ever be rewarded?

Monday, August 10, 2009

The Great Divide – Dublin versus rural Ireland

agriculture I LISTENED to a panel discussion this morning about the supposed divide between Dublin and rural Ireland on The Tubridy Show on RTE Radio 1. Perhaps the biggest perpetrators of this divide, if it really exists, could be the sons and daughters of farmers brought up in modest circumstances on family farms, but who are now infatuated with the charms of Dublin and the allure of the ‘knowledge economy’, according to one of the contributors. 

One of those contributors was Mairead Lavery, a journalist with the Farmers Journal.  She stated fairly categorically that the output of agriculture and its ‘spin-offs’ was €11 billion and responsible for 220,000 jobs.  That would be wonderful if it were remotely accurate and defensible and it stimulated my curiosity to check the underlying facts. It is a pity to have weakened the credibility of an interesting debate by exaggerating accomplishments!

My own view is that rural life in Ireland has an authenticity and candour that simply cannot flourish in the clutter of an urban environment.  A close friend of mine showed me photographs this weekend of a recent visit to Newport, Co Mayo which featured street musicians at pubs and cafes as well ‘characters’ neighbours and ‘old-timers’ from the town all totally at ease in each others company.  The warmth and friendship that was so abundantly evident was infectious. No identity crisis here!  That, I believe, transcends  economic dimension of rural Ireland. 

Income

The CSO published the National Income and Expenditure Accounts for 2008 last week. Table 4 shows that the gross added value of agriculture, forestry and fisheries in 2008 was €3.95 billion and that this level of added value was stagnant since 2005 when it amounted to €4.27 billion.  That is well short of the €11 billion suggested by Miss Lavery. 

The food and drinks processing sector, some of which is connected to agriculture, claims exports of €8 billion, another figure that has stagnant over several years when the economy was vibrant.  The 2003 annual report of An Bord Bia, whose purpose is to market Irish food overseas, stated that the estimated value of food exports in 2003 was €6.67 billion.  It would seem, therefore, that Irish food has not made a major tantalising impact on the human palates of the universe since then.

There are 128,200 farms in the country and only 22,700 of these are of 50 hectares, or more.  Over 65% of Irish farmers are over 55 years of age.  There were 141,500 at the turn of the 21st century.

The remuneration of employees in agriculture in 2008 was €542 million, a figure that has increased by 24% since 2003. 

The income of independent traders allied to agriculture in 2008 was €2.65 billion according to these official figures.  When the remuneration of employees is combined with the earnings of independent traders connected to agriculture, we learn that the ‘toil of the soil’ actually accounted for 2.7% of the personal incomes of households an non-profit institutions in the state.

Farming continues to contract as a component of the Irish economy and there must be questions about its viability.  Weak commodity prices imply weak bargaining power – an experience that, for example, eludes the oil producers of the world.  They squeal and we say ‘how much?’

Employment

The total Irish labour force at the end of March 2009 was 2.18 million, of which 222,800 were unemployed.  Agriculture accounts for 101,500 of the 1.96 million people that were in employment at that time. Farms employs 15,200 non-family workers.  Over 60% of farmers had off-farm employment in 2007.  Before the economic downturn an estimated 50,000 persons worked in the food industry.  The maximum number that agriculture, food and fisheries could therefore claim to employ is closer tot 150,000 directly and indirectly, rather than the 220,000 suggested by Miss Lavery.

 

Public Expenditure and overspending

When Dublin people think of rural Ireland the image of subsidies is never far from their mind!

  2008 2004
European Agriculture Guarantee Fund €1,457.34M €1,399.39
Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food €1,800.70M €1000.64M
Administration €303.86M €254.35M
Total Public Expenditure €3,561.90M €2,724.41M
 
When the Exchequer Statement for July 2009 was released it revealed that there was a shortfall in tax income of €575 million against a target set 3 months ago.
 
It also revealed that while most of the government departments had lower spending for the January-July period in 2009 and as a consequence overall spending was €161 million more than it ought to have been, the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food had spent spent €219 million more than it did a year earlier.
 
I’m not an expert on agriculture but New Zealand farmers are citizens of an island nation that share many characteristics with Ireland.  They have not had subsidies since the 1980’s when they recognised that paying subsidies generated inflation in New Zealand.  To what extent can Irish farmers continue to be subsidised and at what cost to whom?
 
An Bord Snip
 
A lower number of subsidised schemes are the headline recommendation and a rationalisation of the network of DAFF and Teagasc locations combined with a corresponding rationalisation of the 6,264 staff by eliminating 1,140 jobs.  The proposed full-year savings are projected to be €305.1 million, 6% of the €5 billion overall savings necessary to keep Anglo Irish Bank with sufficient capital.
 
Savings Measures
 
 

Annualised
savings

Staff reductions

Agriculture, food and fisheries policy and development €51.3M 450
Food, animal, plant safety and consumer welfare €83.3M 340
Rural economy, environment and structural change €87.5M 150
Customer service and payment delivery €73.0M 100
Corporate services €10.0M 100
Total current savings €304.1M 1,140
 
 

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Where to now for Sinn Fein in Dublin?

adams THE President of Sinn Féin, Gerry Adams MP MLA, in a interview with Michael Moriarty Northern Editor of The Irish Times on 8 August stated that regaining lost ground in Dublin “is ultra-important because if you can get a critical active campaigning organisation there you are likely to get more publicity, to get the media exposure and so on”. What’s been happening to Sinn Féin in Dublin?

The 2002 general election was the first since The Good Friday Agreement. Sinn Féin won 40,450 first preference votes in Dublin and won Dáil seats in Dublin South-Central, Dublin South-West and the successful candidate there topped the poll and surpassed a quota. Candidate stood in all 11 Dublin constituencies. Two of these, Larry O’Toole and Dessie Ellis, were established members of Dublin City Council. O’Toole polled 3,003 votes in Dublin North-East to secure fifth place in that 3-seater. Ellis polled 4,781 votes to secure fourth place in the Dublin North-West 3-seater – not a breakthrough on their local council vote.

The party polled 51,943 votes in the 2004 local elections in Dublin and secured 12.2% of all votes cast in the three Dublin local authorities. They performed slightly better north of the Liffey securing a 14.5% share of the vote compared to a 10.5% share south of the Liffey. Top vote getters O’Toole polled 4,497 votes in Artane and Ellis polled 4,300 votes in Finglas. Sinn Féin won 10 seats on Dublin City Council, 3 seats on South Dublin County Council, 1 seat on Fingal County County Council and none on Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council. However, four of their winners, O’Toole, Ellis, Kehoe and Forde surpassed a quota in 2002 but Ellis was the only one to emulate this in 2004.

The 2004 European Parliament Election enticed a higher turnout in Dublin than in 1999. The valid poll increased from 286,684 votes to 421,897 votes. Mary Lou McDonald polled 60,395 votes and won the fourth of four seats. When McDonald stood as a candidate in Dublin West in the 2002 general election she polled 2,404 votes. She stood as a candidate in Dublin Central in the 2007 general election and polled 3,182 votes.

The 2007 general election resulted in a significant shrinkage in support for Sinn Féin. The party won 35,256 votes in the 11 Dublin constituencies – representing a 7% share of the Dublin vote and 16,687 fewer than in the previous general election. They secured just one Dáil seat that of Aengus Ó’Snodaigh in Dublin South-Central. He won the fifth seat with 4,825 votes, 776 fewer than in 2002. The vote of the star performed in 2002, Seán Crowe plummeted to 5,066. They lost ground in 9 of the 11 constituencies and particularly so in Dublin South-West (-8.1%), Dublin Central (-5.4%) and Dublin West (-3.2%). The extent of the overall downturn was consistent, north and south of the Liffey.

There was a further contraction in support in the 2009 local elections. A total of 36,241 votes were won in the three Dublin local authority areas compared to 51,953 votes in the previous local election – a 30% reversal in voter support.

Larry O’Toole’s star waned when he polled just 2,702 votes in Artane, just shy of a quota. Dessie Ellis also took a hit at the polls in Finglas when he won 3,263 votes compared to the 4,300 he won in 2004. They have five seats on Dublin City Council and would have had five if Councillor Christy Burke had not abandoned his 25-year stint as a Sinn Féin councillor and Councillor Louise Minihan had not opted to become an Independent on the grounds that she “no longer supports or believes in the party”.  While they had a winner in Cabra-Glasnevin in 2009, possibly as a consequence of the electoral travails of ‘the brudder’, Maurice Ahern, their vote in this area was down by 12.5%.  The endured a similar haircut in South-East Inner City and in Tallaght-Central, although Sean Crowe won a seat on the 9th count.

Mary Lou McDonald lost her bid to secure one of the 3 seats in the Dublin European Parliament election. Her vote dropped to 47,928 despite her elevation to the role of Vice President.

Summary of Sinn Votes in Dublin

 

1st Preference Votes

2002 – General Election

40,450

2004 - Local Election

51,943

2004 – European Parliament Election

47,928

2007 – General Election

35,356

2009 – Local Election

36,241

2009 – European Parliament Election

47,928

Dublin by-elections

The two Dublin by-elections in 2009 did not any relief to the prevailing trend. While Councillor Christy Burke picked up 588 more votes than Mary Lou McDonald did in Dublin Central in the 2007 general election that compares to the 138 votes lost in the Dublin South by-election.

Floating Vote, general elections.

The floating vote in each of these elections caries quite significantly from one to another.

The floating vote between the two general elections as 13.4%. An extra 17,842 voters turned out in 2007 and 43,414 who voted in 2004 changed their vote in 2007.

The floating vote between the two sets of local elections was 85,357 – 20.1%. The losers were Fianna Fáil (30,490), Greens (13,871), Sinn Féin (15,702), Progressive Democrats – now obsolete (24,631), Socialists (663) and a lower turnout of 17,037 voters. Those who gained were Fine Gael (20,151) and Labour (27,157)

The floating vote between the two Euro elections was 16.3% in Dublin. The turnout was lower by 15,257 and the losers were Fianna Fáil (23,648), Labour (11,580), Sinn Féin (12,467) and Greens (21,359).

 

Vote transfer patterns, general elections

  2002 2007
North of the Liffey    
Received 3,003 2,410
Gave 10,857 12,145
South of the Liffey    
Received 3,831 3,708
Gave 11,974 9,233

 

 

This is a function of when a candidate is eliminated but the message is that there are relatively few votes being transferred to Sinn Féin. 

 

Mr Adams refers to future ambitions in the context of they being ‘a long haul’. I wonder do the electorate in the State have the same attitude to Sinn Féin as the electorate in Northern Ireland have to candidates sponsored by the Tories and the Labour Party.

ferris There is much soul searching to be done and I reckon that the electorate need more to stimulate them than the sight of Martin Ferris TD greeting and facilitating two convicts on their release from Castlerea Prison at the conclusion of their sentence for killing Garda Jerry McCabe on duty.

Friday, August 7, 2009

The Irish motor industry is in a bit of of a pickle, …or should I say a stew?

              
audi logo The overall decline in the registration of new private cars in Ireland is so stark that at times I wonder if I am comparing like with like when observing the trend in new private cars licensed over several years! 

Ireland is not the only Western European country in poor shape.  Car sales throughout Europe, apart from Germany, have declined by over 19% to 4.9 million units.  Overall sales in Spain in 2009 are down 38.3% and overall sales in the UK sunk by 25.9%. 

Germany is the only jewel in the car sector.  Sales there increased this year by 26.1% to 2.1 million vehicles!

Worldwide production of cars is 30% greater than 2009 demand – reflecting the 25% drop in global demand this year.  Audi executives believe that the need to update vehicle technology and models will mean that car makers will not recover pre economic crisis profit levels for the foreseeable future, even if sales volumes recover.

The only ray of optimism in the global car market has been in China where car sales in August 2009 were 90% higher than in August 2008 and are likely to reach 7.3 million vehicles this year.  This trend is spurred by a more broad-based improvement in consumer confidence.

 

Audi vehicle deliveries worldwide

The Irish downturn can be put into a wider European and world context by comparing the delivery of Audi cars in the first half of 2009 with those during the first half of 2008 as benchmark indicator:

Deliveries to customers Jan – Jun
2009
Jan – Jun 2008 % Change
       
Germany 113,882 122,404 -7.0%
Australia 5,612 5,103 10.0%
Austria 8,999 8,520 5.6%
Belgium 16,618 18,197 -8.7%
China 66,866 60,509 10.5%
France 24,914 27,993 -11.0%
Holland 7,574 7,893 -4.0%
*Ireland 1,893 3,152 -39.9%
Italy 30,199 30,461 -0.9%
Japan 7,579 7,893 -4.0%
Russia 7,404 8,660 -14.5%
Spain 20,039 30,348 -34.0%
Sweden 6,193 8,196 -24.4%
Switzerland 8,133 8,367 -2.8%
United Kingdom 46,684 57,983 -19.5%
United States 37,845 45,023 -15.9%
Other countries 55,544 65,517 -15.2%
Audi cars worldwide 465,978 516,219 -9.7%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

However, I think that an authentic acid test of how the economy is performing is to review spending patterns. If they change dramatically in overall terms, as is the case in Ireland, how are the demographic sub-sets responding? 

Four car brands are especially popular in Ireland among those with some discretionary spending power.  They are Audi, BMW, Mercedes Benz and Volvo

merc These brands, combined accounted for 8.5% of the 150,485 new private cars sold here in 2002.  The new private car market expanded by 2006 to 173,273 vehicles and these four brands increased their combined share to 10.6%.  This year an economic hurricane has mutilated the Irish new car sector.  Total units sales for the Jan-Jun six-months were 42,365 but the interesting nugget is that these four car brands have maintained a 10.4% share of this most depressed market.

The demographic cohort that is more likely to purchase these brands include:

  • Self-employed individuals, including proprietary directors
  • Those receiving dividends or other distributions paid from profits to shareholders of a company resident in Ireland 

New Private Car Registrations during Irish boom

2002

2006

Change

% Change

Audi

3,060

4,232

+1,172

+38%

BMW

4,147

6,137

+1,990

+48%

Mercedes Benz

3,734

5,159

+1,425

+38%

Volvo

1,807

2,763

+956

+53%

All private cars

150,485

173,273

+22,788

+15%

Source: Central Statistics Office

Income Trends of Likely Buyer Cohort

Turning to the presumed customer cohort, the following illustrates their changes in number and income using income distribution statistics provided by the Revenue Commissioners:

 

Ireland

2002

2006

% Change

Gross income of self-employed, including proprietary directors

€12,822.10M

€20,824.05M

+62%

Number of self-employed, including proprietary directors

251,893

289,321

+14.8%

Dividends and other distributions from profits of companies resident in Ireland

€263.6M

€586.3M

+121%

 Source: Revenue Commissioners

Income tax from self-employed individuals declined by 30.5% in 2008.  The recent spending trend by Irish consumers on ‘personal transport and equipment’ is captured by the recently published edition of National Income and Expenditure:

National spending trend
on ‘Personal Transport and Equipment’

  Expenditure on ‘personal transport and equipment’ % Total personal expenditure
2008 €3,738M 3.18%
2007 €4,282M 3.70%
2006 €3,950M 3,74%
2005 €3,565M 3.69%
2004 €3,068M 3.44%
    Source: Central Statistics Office
 

           

Impact of downturn on 2009 sales

Units sales for the first six months of 2009 are a symptom of a society overburdened with property related debt – either as a purchaser, developer, renter, speculator, wealth hoarder or, merely, incurable optimist.  Put at its simplest – bankers lent excessively to all facets of the property sector and there is no spending, or borrowing capacity left for anything else. 

 

Jan-Jun 2009

Audi

1,893

BMW

1,125

Mercedes Benz

1,425

Volvo

485

All private cars

42,365

 

But the 2009 sales of some other high-end brands are also severely pinched:

 

Jan-Jun 2009

Alfa Romeo

182

Jaguar

328

Land Rover

271

Lexus

388

Porsche

61

Saab

418

 

Supporting economic dynamics in Ireland

 

 

Dec 2002

Dec 2006

Mar 2009

Non-mortgage household debt

€10,642M

€16,984M

€18,336M

Unemployment

84,900

91,800

222,800

Live Register

166,142

155,389

321,271

‘At work’

1,857,000

2,166,700

1,965,600

 Source: Central Banks and CSO

The number on the Live Register at the end of July 2009 has risen by 31% to 435,735 since last March.  An unemployment rate of 12.2% at the end of July 2009 will not revive any new car sales.

 

Double-digit downturn worldwide 


bmw The BMW Group sold 338,190 cars in the second quarter of 2009 and 615,454 in the first half of 2009.  This represented an 18.1% decline in the second quarter and 19.5% decline in the first six months.  BMW made a profit of €121 million in the second quarter, a decline of 76.1%.  Group brands include BMW, Mini and Rolls Royce.

volvo Audi sold 570,388 cars (including Lamborghini and certain VW brands) in the first half of 2009 – an 11% drop over 2008.  Rupert Stadler, the Audi chairman remarked that given the degree of instability in the car market, he predicted a decade of major change that will encompass technologies and structures.

Ford have been attempting to sell its Volvo car unit for some time. One of the interested bidders is the Geely Automobile Holdings from Hong Kong.  This company started out in 1986 as a refrigerator manufacturer.  It evolved into the motorcycle business in the mid 1990’s and by 1998 started to make cars – exporting its first vehicle as recently as 2003.

Ageing buyers abandon luxury brands

Aside from the recession, car buyers in major markets are ageing rapidly.  Those aged 60, and over, represent less than 30% of car buyers but research by Credit Suisse suggests that this cohort will account for 40% of the luxury car buying group by 2020.  They prefer smaller, cheaper and easier-to-drive vehicles.  Profit levels on smaller cars are lower than is the case with larger cars.

Also in The Crimson Observer …

May: Irish motorcycle industry holds the road’

June: Irish motor industry in a dramatic nose dive’

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Brendan Rossiter retires from IDA Ireland

Brendan Rossiter_0085_edited-1 Brendan Rossiter (right) retired from IDA Ireland on 30 June and a reception was held in his honour on 6th August at the agency’s headquarters in Wilton Place, Dublin.

Brendan served the agency for 32 years and he spent almost 14 years overseas.  He had two assignments in Tokyo, one as Director of Asia Pacific and he was also Director Europe based in Frankfurt and, more recently, in London.

A keen opera buff, an astute gardener and an enthusiastic tennis player  with an innate curiosity about all the places he lived in, Brendan made the most of his opportunities to pursue these experiences to the fullest possible extent.

He was hugely respected by his colleagues and clients.  Brendan was regarded as an exemplary professional in the challenging world of promoting foreign direct investment into Ireland

AIB 2009 Interim Results – another ghost to haunt the ‘Hall of Shame’

aib It never ceases to amaze me how these devious hypocrites that run banks present results against a context of factors that are inflicted on them and the existence of which have nothing to do with their own delinquency.  It is as though they are the hapless victims of injured innocence.

The 2009 Interim Results at AIB are the latest case in point.  They report an operating loss of €872 million compared to a profit of €1.27 billion in June 2008. Deposits are down to €83 billion from a high of €93 billion in December 2008, having been €81 billion in December 2007.  No less than 37% of the AIB loan portfolio is in construction and property; a further 24% in residential mortgages – amounting to €31 billion in Ireland. Of this €31 billion, only €14.6 billion is declared ‘satisfactory’; the remainder is either impaired, vulnerable, or ‘on watch’. 

The Ireland impaired element relates to 13 contractors while the vulnerable and ‘on watch’ element relates to 74 contractors.  The small number of individuals involved there must have meant fabulous savings on the annual AIB Christmas card circulation.  The property and construction loans criticised are 67% of all Irish loans, while the land and development loans criticised are 74% of all Irish loans in this category.

The amount of impaired residential mortgages in Ireland has more than doubled from €148 million last December to €322 million.  AIB has a home mortgage book in Ireland of €26.5 billion and the outstanding value of all home mortgages at the end of June 2009 was €148.1 billion including securitized mortgages, according to Central Bank data.

A mere 5% in manufacturing and 11% in services.  The AIB search for authentic value-added opportunities knew no bounds.

The diabolical outcome is attributable to a Pandora’s Box of explanations -  “recessionary conditions continuing”, “weak customer loan demand”, “assets quality weakens” etc etc as if the management of this wretched bank was not the central architect of much of this mess along with Bowler’s Irish Life & Permanent and Boucher’s Bank of Ireland, the yahoos at ACC, Fingleton’s Irish Nationwide Building Society and EBS.  At least the chairman of EBS, Mark Moran and the finance director, Alan Merriman promptly resigned in March after their genius resulted in a loss of €32.8 million at EBS in 2008.

Sheehy advises that “overdependence on the construction industry is rapidly diminishing”.  Oh dear, how come?  This junkie must be on a 12-steps recovery programme because the construction industry was bloated to death by all the Irish banks and their hero, Sean Fitzpatrick.   Boucher almost climbed a tower crane to advocate on behalf of Sean Dunne’s planning application for Ballsbridge and Bowler’s so sad outfit provides a subversive deposit in Anglo Irish Bank so that the mascara in its 2008 annual report did not run.  The moral I guess is that you cannot make money from a corporate corpse, unless you’re an undertaker. 

Sheehy, in a display of low peasant-cunning,  remarks about the ‘solid operating performance’, even though operating profit in Ireland is down 33% to €394 million and bad debts amount to over €1.9 billion!  Yikes!!  He reports impaired loans in Ireland of €8.51 billion – 10.9% of advances and a provision against profit of €1.79 billion in respect of these. There is a provision of €17.1 billion in respect of development and land in Ireland.  He concludes by telling his shareholders and the Irish taxpayers who were obliged to provide €3.5 billion that future prospects are enhanced by “a firm resolve to manage our business efficiently”.  What bishops gave him that line – because he and his blundering band of incompetents have certainly sodomised the Irish economy - one more medallion in the AIB Hall of Shame:

March 1985: Insurance Corporation of Ireland €357 million bailout
(CEO: Gerry Scanlan)

May 1988: 2.2 million Dana Petroleum shares, failed share issue; underwriting loss – shares put into staff pension account (CEO Gerry Scanlan)

October 1990: Internal Auditor of AIB reassigned and to report to Brian Wilson, General Manager for Ireland (CEO Gerry Scanlan)

February 1991: DIRT evasion exposed and denied. £90 million settlement in 2000 (CEO Gerry Scanlan)

1989 – 1996 Faldor Investment scam - £48,000 in artificial deals connected to AIB Investment Managers’ own funds

April 1998: media report that AIB had 53,000 bogus non-resident accounts (CEO Tom Mulcahy)

June 2002: $691 million foreign exchange fraud perpetrated at Allfirst, an AIB subsidiary in Baltimore, Maryland (CEO Michael Buckley)

2004: Overcharged on the purchase of 3 million foreign drafts; cost of refunds €50 million Other overcharging episodes related to variable rate mortgages (Surplus Builder), 34,000 student and graduate loans, overdraft limit amendment fess affecting 24,000 customers, charges connected to the early termination of finance and leasing transactions affecting over 900 customers, to mentioned just some.  (CEO Michael Buckley)

March 2006: Scanlan and three other senior AIB executives cited by the Revenue Commissioners for income tax evasion.

Of course, the hinges on the Hall of Shame were crafted from the ‘special relationship’ between AIB, Charles Haughey and Des Traynor.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

A profile of Ireland’s self-employed ‘fat-cats’!

celtic tiger I hope it would not be too impertinent too suggest that a symptom of an advancing society is an evolving middle class and that their evolution is reflected in a sense of growing prosperity and rightly so.  What was the purpose of The Celtic Tiger is it was not to achieve that outcome?  I spent an hour, or so, this afternoon analyzing the fortunes of two cohorts: self employed earning between €100,000 and €200,000 between 2002 and 2006 and self-employed earning over €200,000 during this time-frame. 

My preference for this five-year period is that I have fairly complete and accurate data from which to base my comments. 

I will write separately on another day with my analysis of those with unearned income and dividends! Stay tuned Wilma!! 

Unfortunately, the consequences of an Irish banking system that has collapsed to something comparable to that of the fringes of the Third World will ensure that this data reflects a high-point rather than a waypoint because he Irish economy is somersaulting into somewhere natural light never penetrates.

The Department of Finance published the July Exchequer Statement today.  This shows that income tax receipts to the end of July at €6.356 billion compared to €6.879 billion last July,  The adverse difference is €523 million.  Last April, after the second Budget, the Department of Finance forecast income tax receipts of €6.541 million so this component is off target by €185 million, or 2.8%. Total tax receipts in July 2009 are 17.6% lower than 12 months ago.  That, in money terms is €3.98 billion after the seventh month of this year.

The Report of An Bord Snip Nua sought cuts of €5 billion and that has created a feeding frenzy among the subsidy hunters.  The banks have pocketed €11 billion this year and their begging habit is unlikely to abate.  It would take an inspired mystic to figure out where this country is heading economically. 

Most government departments have pared spending with the exception of the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food which has dished out €218 million more than a year ago to appease the egg-throwing hobby farmers.

Capital investment at the end of March 2009 was down 34.1% compared to a year earlier.

The number of redundancies notified to the Department of Enterprise, Trade & Employment in July – 6,350, were 65% more than last July.

There is so much misalignment between income, costs, confidence and aspirations that the economy may be castrated and I hope that the details below are not an episode of ‘Gone With the Wind’!

Silver Club: 
Self-employed earning €100k to €200k

The number of self-employed earners increased by 66% from 8,227 to 13,677.  While the number of earners increased, their average income slipped ever so slightly from €137k to €135.6k.  Their cumulative tax payments increased from €246.79 million to €358.84 million.  But their tax wedge dropped from 21.9% in 2002 to 19.3% in 2006.  I bet we will hear more from the subsidy bounty-hunters about this.  They will see this group of under 14,000 as a target to hunt for higher and higher taxes to that they can feed bountiful subsidies to their clients and take national credit for it!

Platinum Club:
Self-employed earning €200k+

This, of course, is a more prestigious club but it did manage to increase membership from just shy of 5,000 to almost 9,400 by 2006.  But, unlike their junior partners in the Silver Club, their average earnings increased quite significantly from a tad over €400,000 in 2002 to a sliver under €600,000 in 2008.  The tax payments in Platinum Club are more muscular.  Their collective contribution to the national kitty increased from €541.52 million to €1.46 billion and they managed to maintain their tax wedge at around 26%. 

A glance at the annual reports of various state agencies would convince you that among the many virtues and advantages that Irish society confers on them is saturation political patronage.  They simply love button upholstery made from well tanned hide!

Demographic Profile

Silver Club: €100k to €200k

Number of Taxpayers

2002

2006

& Change

Single males

940

1,948

107%

Single females

341

717

110%

Married, both earning

4,627

8,528

84%

Married, one earning

2,145

2,147

0.1%

Widowers

74

139

88%

Widows

100

198

98%

TOTAL

8,227

13,677

66%

 

Platinum Club: over €200k 

Number of Taxpayers

2002 2006 % Change
Single males 494 1,193 141%
Single females 171 416 143%
Married, both earning 2,474 5,379 117%
Married, one earning 1,738 2,226 28%
Widowers 54 106 96%
Widows 31 67 116%
TOTAL 4,962
9,387 89%